The answer is sharks and whales! I can't find a third one.
Lizards can be tertiary consumers in some tropical rainforest ecosystems, but this depends on their specific diet and ecological role. Many lizards are primarily insectivores or herbivores, placing them in lower trophic levels as primary or secondary consumers. However, larger lizards that prey on other animals, such as small mammals or birds, can be considered tertiary consumers. Therefore, not all lizards in tropical rainforests fit this category.
Tertiary Consumers: The diets of tertiary consumers may include animals from both the primary and secondary trophic levels. Like secondary consumers, their diet may also include some plants. Examples of tertiary consumers include Hawks, Alligators and Coyotes. Hawks feed on small mammals, lizards and snakes.
animals such as snakes, hawks, or mongoose
fishes
primary consumer
The primary consumers in the Arctic Ocean are phytoplankton and crustaceans that consume the zooplankton. Harp seals are secondary consumers, which mainly eat fish like Arctic cod and Arctic char, and some crustaceans. The top predators, or tertiary consumers, are polar bears and the Orca whale.
The primary consumers are opossums, skunks, deer, rodents, fish, birds, and bears.
An apex predator and a tertiary consumer are not necessarily the same, although they can overlap. An apex predator is at the top of the food chain with no natural predators, while a tertiary consumer is an organism that feeds on secondary consumers. While many apex predators are also tertiary consumers, not all tertiary consumers are apex predators, as some may be preyed upon by others.
frogs
Yes and no. Some species of beetle can be primary consumers, while other species are secondary or tertiary consumers.
Some tertiary consumers in fresh water may include fresh water alligators, snapping turtles, and large fish.
Some consumers in the marine biome is the Blue marlin, Clown Anemonefish, Porcupine fish, Smooth Hammerhead, Brown booby, and Hawksbill.